I've recently moved into a 20 yr old house where various recessed halogen downlights are fitted, and the surveyor said they needed fireproofing. Having been up into the loft, I see the most recent (in the en-suite loo) have tubular black plastic casing above them, and the loft insulation has been cut away to allow a clear space around them. Quite a neat job. I _think_ these are fire rated.
However, the recessed lights to the bedroom and main bathroom have the decorative surrounds spring-mounted in a pretty rough hole cut into the plasterboard, and just a wire going to the connector on the back of the bulb (20-35W 12V MR16). These had loft insulation over the top of the lights, wiring and junction box, and chipboard over the top of the insulation. Having pulled back the insulation, the underside of it is significantly darkened just where it was sitting over the top of the lights. This didn't look good to me and I've currently got the insulation propped up to keep it off the lights, hoping that is safer in the interim until I can find a better (and more affordable) solution. Obviously the house hasn't burnt down yet, but it does worry me.
Question is... if I went to the expense of swapping the halogen lights for LED ones (guessing I'd need to swap the transformer for a suitable driver too), would that be any safer in terms of fire risk, or would they need insulation clearance and possibly fire hoods too? Guessing the LEDS will run cooler, but that the risks of electrical fault, sparks etc will remain... and with LED bulbs at about a tenner each (maybe more for decent ones) and a total of 15 recessed halogens to replace, it's hardly cheap to jump on the LED bandwagon at the moment.
Also, this is a real novice question, possibly a daft one, but if there's a transformer running say two or four LV bulbs, is there any problem if one or two of those bulbs is permanently removed (presumably the point of the transformer is that it supplies the current in demand, i.e. no minimum/predetermined draw)? And is there any safety risk in leaving either a dud bulb or just a disconnected cable in this kind of setup?
Also got recessed halogens in the kitchen - these are 12V G4 bulbs in a shallow casing with glass lenses, built into the kitchen units. Not much chance of fireproofing those.
On a steep learning curve here - never had pesky halogens before...
However, the recessed lights to the bedroom and main bathroom have the decorative surrounds spring-mounted in a pretty rough hole cut into the plasterboard, and just a wire going to the connector on the back of the bulb (20-35W 12V MR16). These had loft insulation over the top of the lights, wiring and junction box, and chipboard over the top of the insulation. Having pulled back the insulation, the underside of it is significantly darkened just where it was sitting over the top of the lights. This didn't look good to me and I've currently got the insulation propped up to keep it off the lights, hoping that is safer in the interim until I can find a better (and more affordable) solution. Obviously the house hasn't burnt down yet, but it does worry me.
Question is... if I went to the expense of swapping the halogen lights for LED ones (guessing I'd need to swap the transformer for a suitable driver too), would that be any safer in terms of fire risk, or would they need insulation clearance and possibly fire hoods too? Guessing the LEDS will run cooler, but that the risks of electrical fault, sparks etc will remain... and with LED bulbs at about a tenner each (maybe more for decent ones) and a total of 15 recessed halogens to replace, it's hardly cheap to jump on the LED bandwagon at the moment.
Also, this is a real novice question, possibly a daft one, but if there's a transformer running say two or four LV bulbs, is there any problem if one or two of those bulbs is permanently removed (presumably the point of the transformer is that it supplies the current in demand, i.e. no minimum/predetermined draw)? And is there any safety risk in leaving either a dud bulb or just a disconnected cable in this kind of setup?
Also got recessed halogens in the kitchen - these are 12V G4 bulbs in a shallow casing with glass lenses, built into the kitchen units. Not much chance of fireproofing those.
On a steep learning curve here - never had pesky halogens before...